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Internet name domains (RFC0799)

Publishing Venue

Internet Society Requests For Comment (RFCs)

Related People

D.L. Mills: AUTHOR

Abstract

In the long run, it will not be practicable for every internet host to include all internet hosts in its name-address tables. Even now, with over four hundred names and nicknames in the combined ARPANET-DCNET tables, this has become awkward. Some sort of hierarchical name-space partitioning can easily be devised to deal with this problem; however, it has been wickedly difficult to find one compatible with the known mail systems throughout the community. The one proposed here is the product of several discussions and meetings and is believed both compatible with existing systems and extensible for future systems involving thousands of hosts.

Country

United States

Language

English (United States)

This text was extracted from a ASCII document.

This is the abbreviated version, containing approximately 20% of the total text.

Network Working Group D. L. Mills

Request for Comments: 799 COMSAT Laboratories

September 1981

Internet Name Domains

1. Introduction

In the long run, it will not be practicable for every internet

host to include all internet hosts in its name-address tables. Even

now, with over four hundred names and nicknames in the combined

ARPANET-DCNET tables, this has become awkward. Some sort of

hierarchical name-space partitioning can easily be devised to deal

with this problem; however, it has been wickedly difficult to find one

compatible with the known mail systems throughout the community. The

one proposed here is the product of several discussions and meetings

and is believed both compatible with existing systems and extensible

for future systems involving thousands of hosts.

2. General Topology

We first observe that every internet host is uniquely identified

by one or more 32-bit internet addresses and that the entire system is